55

I have this html code:

<p style="padding:0px;">
  <strong style="padding:0;margin:0;">hello</strong>
</p>

How can I remove attributes from all tags? I'd like it to look like this:

<p>
  <strong>hello</strong>
</p>
0

10 Answers 10

180

Adapted from my answer on a similar question

$text = '<p style="padding:0px;"><strong style="padding:0;margin:0;">hello</strong></p>';

echo preg_replace("/<([a-z][a-z0-9]*)[^>]*?(\/?)>/si",'<$1$2>', $text);

// <p><strong>hello</strong></p>

The RegExp broken down:

/              # Start Pattern
 <             # Match '<' at beginning of tags
 (             # Start Capture Group $1 - Tag Name
  [a-z]        # Match 'a' through 'z'
  [a-z0-9]*    # Match 'a' through 'z' or '0' through '9' zero or more times
 )             # End Capture Group
 [^>]*?        # Match anything other than '>', Zero or More times, not-greedy (wont eat the /)
 (\/?)         # Capture Group $2 - '/' if it is there
 >             # Match '>'
/is            # End Pattern - Case Insensitive & Multi-line ability

Add some quoting, and use the replacement text <$1$2> it should strip any text after the tagname until the end of tag /> or just >.

Please Note This isn't necessarily going to work on ALL input, as the Anti-HTML + RegExp will tell you. There are a few fallbacks, most notably <p style=">"> would end up <p>"> and a few other broken issues... I would recommend looking at Zend_Filter_StripTags as a more full proof tags/attributes filter in PHP

9
  • 13
    Shouldn't use Regular Expressions on HTML
    – 472084
    Nov 13, 2011 at 14:12
  • 8
    @Jleagle are you serious? There is already a comment IN THE ANSWER mentioning ways to break this regular expression while parsing HTML. There are times when parsing HTML with a regexp is plenty fine (like the HTML is generated by some known system, therefore quite regular. If you are going to comment something about not parsing HTML with Regular Expressions - at least add something that isn't already stated in the answer.
    – gnarf
    Nov 13, 2011 at 22:22
  • 1
    I have something like this <img src="mysite/sampleImage.jpg" width="150" /> I want the src to be retained because what the code is doing, it is deleting all the attributes. You have any idea with this? :) May 21, 2012 at 11:02
  • Could any of the fallbacks cause a security problem? Would something like this $some_tags_filtered = strip_tags($_POST['message'], '<p><strong><em>'); combined with your method to remove the attributes be safe from XSS attacks?
    – Dan Bray
    Mar 15, 2016 at 21:20
  • 2
    if you know the tags you could do something like $plain_value = preg_replace("/<(p|br)[^>]*?(\/?)>/i",'<$1>', $plain_value); Apr 1, 2016 at 9:46
85

Here is how to do it with native DOM:

$dom = new DOMDocument;                 // init new DOMDocument
$dom->loadHTML($html);                  // load HTML into it
$xpath = new DOMXPath($dom);            // create a new XPath
$nodes = $xpath->query('//*[@style]');  // Find elements with a style attribute
foreach ($nodes as $node) {              // Iterate over found elements
    $node->removeAttribute('style');    // Remove style attribute
}
echo $dom->saveHTML();                  // output cleaned HTML

If you want to remove all possible attributes from all possible tags, do

$dom = new DOMDocument;
$dom->loadHTML($html);
$xpath = new DOMXPath($dom);
$nodes = $xpath->query('//@*');
foreach ($nodes as $node) {
    $node->parentNode->removeAttribute($node->nodeName);
}
echo $dom->saveHTML();
7
  • This does not seem to work when attempting to remove "width" and "height" attributes from HTML tags. Removing any other attribute works fine, except these.
    – user3714134
    Oct 6, 2015 at 10:42
  • 1
    How would I remove all tag attributes except href using this method? Mar 8, 2016 at 16:30
  • 1
    @HelpingHand $node->nodeName contains the attribute name. So you can either if on that or change the XPath to //@*[not(., "href")]
    – Gordon
    Mar 9, 2016 at 13:38
  • why in first case removeAttribe is used directly on node, and in second example, on parentNode? maybe mechanical mistake in example?
    – T.Todua
    Apr 11, 2020 at 12:58
  • @T.Todua in the first example the XPath returns all DOMNodes with a style attribute. In the second example, the XPath returns all DOMAttribute nodes. So you need to traverse to the parent DOMNode in order to remove the attribute.
    – Gordon
    Apr 14, 2020 at 9:24
10

I would avoid using regex as HTML is not a regular language and instead use a html parser like Simple HTML DOM

You can get a list of attributes that the object has by using attr. For example:

$html = str_get_html('<div id="hello">World</div>');
var_dump($html->find("div", 0)->attr); /
/*
array(1) {
  ["id"]=>
  string(5) "hello"
}
*/

foreach ( $html->find("div", 0)->attr as &$value ){
    $value = null;
}

print $html
//<div>World</div>
0
3
$html_text = '<p>Hello <b onclick="alert(123)" style="color: red">world</b>. <i>Its beautiful day.</i></p>';
$strip_text = strip_tags($html_text, '<b>');
$result = preg_replace('/<(\w+)[^>]*>/', '<$1>', $strip_text);
echo $result;

// Result
string 'Hello <b>world</b>. Its beautiful day.'
1
  • The OP doesn't want to strip any tags -- that part is inappropriate. Your regex pattern mutilates the DOM when the innerhtml of a tag contains < then an alphanumeric character. Proof: 3v4l.org/au5fi Jan 15, 2021 at 21:11
3

Another way to do it using php's DOMDocument class (without xpath) is to iterate over the attributes on a given node. Please note, due to the way php handles the DOMNamedNodeMap class, you must iterate backward over the collection if you plan on altering it. This behaviour has been discussed elsewhere and is also noted in the documentation comments. The same applies to the DOMNodeList class when it comes to removing or adding elements. To be on the safe side, I always iterate backwards with these objects.

Here is a simple example:

function scrubAttributes($html) {
    $dom = new DOMDocument();
    $dom->loadHTML($html, LIBXML_HTML_NOIMPLIED | LIBXML_HTML_NODEFDTD);
    for ($els = $dom->getElementsByTagname('*'), $i = $els->length - 1; $i >= 0; $i--) {
        for ($attrs = $els->item($i)->attributes, $ii = $attrs->length - 1; $ii >= 0; $ii--) {
            $els->item($i)->removeAttribute($attrs->item($ii)->name);
        }
    }
    return $dom->saveHTML();
}

Here's a demo: https://3v4l.org/M2ing

1
  • 1
    These "LIBXML_HTML_NOIMPLIED | LIBXML_HTML_NODEFDTD" are important parameters to recover the same HTML you're giving the function. Thanks!
    – Elber CM
    Sep 19, 2022 at 15:45
1

Optimized regular expression from the top rated answer on this issue:

$text = '<div width="5px">a is less than b: a<b, ya know?</div>';

echo preg_replace("/<([a-z][a-z0-9]*)[^<|>]*?(\/?)>/si",'<$1$2>', $text);

// <div>a is less than b: a<b, ya know?</div>

UPDATE:

It works better when allow only some tags with PHP strip_tags() function. Let's say we want to allow only <br>, <b> and <i> tags, then:

$text = '<i style=">">Italic</i>';

$text = strip_tags($text, '<br><b><i>');
echo preg_replace("/<([a-z][a-z0-9]*)[^<|>]*?(\/?)>/si",'<$1$2>', $text);

//<i>Italic</i>

As we can see it fixes flaws connected with tag symbols in attribute values.

0

Regex's are too fragile for HTML parsing. In your example, the following would strip out your attributes:

echo preg_replace(
    "|<(\w+)([^>/]+)?|",
    "<$1",
    "<p style=\"padding:0px;\">\n<strong style=\"padding:0;margin:0;\">hello</strong>\n</p>\n"
);

Update

Make to second capture optional and do not strip '/' from closing tags:

|<(\w+)([^>]+)| to |<(\w+)([^>/]+)?|

Demonstrate this regular expression works:

$ phpsh
Starting php
type 'h' or 'help' to see instructions & features
php> $html = '<p style="padding:0px;"><strong style="padding:0;margin:0;">hello<br/></strong></p>';
php> echo preg_replace("|<(\w+)([^>/]+)?|", "<$1", $html);
<p><strong>hello</strong><br/></p>
php> $html = '<strong>hello</strong>';
php> echo preg_replace("|<(\w+)([^>/]+)?|", "<$1", $html);
<strong>hello</strong>
7
  • this one has a bug, if there is only <strong>hello</strong> it returns <stron>hello</stron>
    – Andres SK
    Jun 11, 2010 at 22:05
  • Updated regex to address issues identified in comments
    – Greg K
    Jan 14, 2012 at 14:44
  • This regex completely hoses hyperlinks. <a href="http://foo.bar">link</a> becomes <a//foo.bar">link</a>. May 22, 2014 at 14:48
  • Regex is inappropriate for parsing html. Watch this answer's pattern fail: 3v4l.org/Spisv Jan 15, 2021 at 21:00
  • 1
    This answer is a decade old, given with best intentions. Why have you picked up on an answer half way down a graveyard question?
    – Greg K
    Jan 24, 2021 at 21:49
0

Hope this helps. It may not be the fastest way to do it, especially for large blocks of html. If anyone has any suggestions as to make this faster, let me know.

function StringEx($str, $start, $end)
{ 
    $str_low = strtolower($str);
    $pos_start = strpos($str_low, $start);
    $pos_end = strpos($str_low, $end, ($pos_start + strlen($start)));
    if($pos_end==0) return false;
    if ( ($pos_start !== false) && ($pos_end !== false) )
    {  
        $pos1 = $pos_start + strlen($start);
        $pos2 = $pos_end - $pos1;
        $RData = substr($str, $pos1, $pos2);
        if($RData=='') { return true; }
        return $RData;
    } 
    return false;
}

$S = '<'; $E = '>'; while($RData=StringEx($DATA, $S, $E)) { if($RData==true) {$RData='';} $DATA = str_ireplace($S.$RData.$E, '||||||', $DATA); } $DATA = str_ireplace('||||||', $S.$E, $DATA);
1
  • Please show an online demo of this technique in action. When I ran it with my own sample html, the script suffered an infinite loop. Also, why would you use str_ireplace() when replacing a sequence of pipes? Jan 15, 2021 at 21:06
-1

To do SPECIFICALLY what andufo wants, it's simply:

$html = preg_replace( "#(<[a-zA-Z0-9]+)[^\>]+>#", "\\1>", $html );

That is, he wants to strip anything but the tag name out of the opening tag. It won't work for self-closing tags of course.

1
  • This breaks when any tag"s innerhtml contains > then an alphanumeric character. Proof: 3v4l.org/nnpc2 Jan 15, 2021 at 20:56
-1

Here's an easy way to get rid of attributes. It handles malformed html pretty well.

<?php
  $string = '<p style="padding:0px;">
    <strong style="padding:0;margin:0;">hello</strong>
    </p>';

  //get all html elements on a line by themselves
  $string_html_on_lines = str_replace (array("<",">"),array("\n<",">\n"),$string); 

  //find lines starting with a '<' and any letters or numbers upto the first space. throw everything after the space away.
  $string_attribute_free = preg_replace("/\n(<[\w123456]+)\s.+/i","\n$1>",$string_html_on_lines);

  echo $string_attribute_free;
?>
1
  • \w already includes numbers so the chatacter class and 123456 is useless. The greedy dot matching is also exposing this pattern to overmatching. Regex is a bad idea for this task, this pattern is an extra bad idea. Jan 15, 2021 at 20:46

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